21 Ga. App. 718 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1918
This case is fully stated in the report made when it appeared in the Supreme Court (Toole v. Wiregrass Development Co., 143 Ga. 57, 83 S. E. 514): “The plaintiff, John E. Toole, brought suit against the Wiregrass Development Company to recover the sum of $7,500 as commissions on sales of real estate during the years of 1910 and 1911. The petition alleged, in substance, as follows: In June, 1910, the plaintiff was conducting a real estate business at Macon, Ga. At this time plaintiff and defendant began negotiations looking to the employment of plaintiff by defendant, to handle and sell for defendant a lot of town property at Pecan City in Dougherty county, Georgia. The property was divided into numerous parcels, and it was in the contemplation of the parties that the parcels should be sold separately or together, and that it would probably take several months in order to complete the sale. In August, 1910, pursuant to the negotiations, defendant through its president and general manager, W. E. Aycock, telegraphed plaintiff to come to its office at Moultrie, Ga., to discuss with the defendant the making of the contract. In response to the telegram plaintiff went to defendant’s office and came to an agreement with defendant, by the terms of which plaintiff was to move from Macon, Ga., to Pecan City, and was to remain there as a resident salesman and general agent of the defendant company, looking after and preserving the lands, improving, ad
“Plaintiff further alleged: He did not, in the year 1911 or 1912,-go before the ordinary of Bibb, Dougherty, or Colquitt county and register his name, the business that he proposed to engage in, and the place where it w:as to be conducted, or pay special tax as a person engaged in the business of buying and selling real estate on commissions. It was not necessary for him to do so, because the contract made by him with defendant was one of employment and service, and not one of the real estate owner on the one hand and a person or firm engaged in the business of buying and selling real estate on commissions on the other, for the reason that plaintiff was not, at the time of making the contract or at any time during the execution thereof, a person or firm engaged in the business of buying or selling real estate on commission; but on the contrary plaintiff was, during all of that time, the employee of defendant alone, and his entire time and services were, by the terms of the contract, commanded by the defendant alone, and he was not employed by or rendering service to any one else. The contract between plaintiff and defendant was not such a one for the selling of real estate on commission as is contemplated by the tax acts imposing a tax on a person or firm engaged in the business of buying or selling real estate, on commission. Further, at the time that plaintiff was engaged in the execution of the contract he was an indigent Confederate soldier who was a resident of this State, and therefore was not subject to the payment ef the tax; and even if he was subject to the tax, the non-payment of it is not and should not be a legal reason why he should not be entitled to his compensation under the terms of the contract.
“The defendant demurred to the petition, on the grounds, among others, that there was nothing alleged to show that Aycock had any authority, expressed or implied, to bind the defendant cor
The Supreme Court, in passing upon the demurrer, considered at length the ground that it appeared that the plaintiff had not complied with the law “with reference to real-estate agents taking a license to do business.” However, the court passed upon all the \other grounds of demurrer briefly, but as certainly, when it was held that “the other grounds of demurrer are without substantial merit.” This being true, this court is now bound by the decision of the Supreme Court in this case. We therefore hold that all questions raised by the demurrer are res judicata, and that the plaintiff set forth a legal cause of action. Having so held, the issue upon the petition as raised by the defendant’s plea is the only question for determination.
The defendant in its plea admitted that it and Toole did have an agreement respecting the sale of the lands described in the petition, but denied that the agreement was as alleged; averring that the agreement was as follows: “that the said plaintiff should advertise for purchasers and use such efforts as he saw fit to find purchasers and make sales of city lots and small tracts of land outside of the town limits, he was to receive no salary, was to pay all of his own expenses and has [as] compensation for all sales that he alone made he was to receive a commission of ten per cent, of the total purchase-price, and upon all sales made to parties sent or directed to him by Aycock he was to exhibit the property and use his best efforts to close the trade and if successful he was to receive as commission for the same five per cent, of the total purchase price. This agreement covered town lots and sales, of- individual small tracts of land. It was expressly understood that the said Aycock reserved the right to sell at any time he found a purchaser the whole of defendant’s lands upon such terms as he saw fit, and in that event plaintiff was to receive no commission. It
From a careful examination of the entire record and all the evidence, we are of the opinion that the court erred in directing a verdict for $10. The evidence of the plaintiff was sufficient to have carried the case to the jury; and, under proper instruction, the jury should have been permitted to determine the issue as to whether the plaintiff was entitled to recover the additional com-, mission. It is always error for the court to direct a verdict when the evidence makes an issue as to the truthfulness of the facts alleged by the plaintiff and the averments of the plea of the defendant. We do not discuss the testimony and what a jury might determine -its probative value to be, for the reason that this case must be tried again. The court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial. See Payne v. Ponder, 139 Ga. 285 (77 S. E. 32).
Judgment reversed.